10 Ways to Deal with Debt Collectors & Collection Agencies

The debt collection industry generates $13 billion a year from the 77 million Americans who haven’t or can’t pay their bills.

Debt collectors get most of their revenue from people who fall hopelessly behind on student loans, medical bills, auto loans, credit cards and home mortgages. Some forms of debt – student loans and medical debt especially – are shooting up so fast that many consumers aren’t even aware they are behind until they receive a call from a collection agency.

Collection agencies often are intimidating, demanding and most of all persistent, in trying to extract whatever money you have available to satisfy your debt. They can be just as aggressive in trying to collect debts you don’t owe, yet some people still pay, just to avoid any more contact with the debt collection agency.

And that is where the trouble begins.

Debt Consolidation Plan

One avenue to explore before defaulting on payments – and inviting debt collection agencies to chase you down – is to consider using one of the methods available in a debt consolidation plan.

There are three types of debt consolidation plans: A Debt Management Program; a Debt Consolidation Loan; and a Debt Settlement Plan. Each is designed to help consumers cope with overwhelming debt from credit cards, home, auto and student loans.

The first step for any of the plans is to contact a credit counseling agency, preferably a non-profit company, which will go over your income and expenses and advise you whether any of the plans will work to eliminate your debt. Enrolling in one of these plans, especially a debt management program, could be a better solution that trying to deal with debt collectors.

Nowhere is the notion of “Knowledge is Power” more important than in the realm of debt collection. The less knowledgeable someone is about a consumer’s rights under the law, the more likely debt collectors will take advantage of a delinquent borrower to repay an overdue obligation.

The situation grew so ugly that the federal government had to step in and pass laws to protect consumers. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) and Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) are part of the Consumer Credit Protection Act, which outlines what is accepted and prohibited behavior from debt collectors. This legislation also stipulates the rights and remedies afforded to consumers who are subject to debt collection efforts. In short, the laws protect consumers – and these are rights that collection agents prefer you not know.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) said it handled 88,300 debt collection complaints in 2014. More than one-third of those involved attempts to collect a debt that consumers say they don’t owe. Another 20% had to do with recurring phone calls at inconvenient times of the day. It’s unlikely collection agencies will share any of that during their phone calls to you, so here is a summary of 10 rules they would rather you didn’t know.

Rule 1: You Don’t Have to Talk

If you do not want to deal with debt collectors on the phone, there is an easy exit door available: Send them a cease-and-desist letter by certified mail that says you no longer want to be contacted by them. If they continue calling you after that, they are in violation of the FDCPA, which puts them in trouble with the federal government. Keep a log of all calls and letters from them. Write down the time and date they called and the agency’s name. Keep any voicemails and letters of correspondence, including ones you sent to them.

That doesn’t mean they won’t still try to collect the debt. It just means they can’t call you to discuss it. They could attempt to settle it through the courts so check the mail for a summons or court notice. If you have an attorney, refer all calls and mail to your lawyer.

Collection agencies can make a negative report to a consumer reporting agency, which would have a negative effect on your credit score.

The point is you are not required to work with them at all, including not talking to them.

Rule 2: It’s OK To Negotiate

If you want to settle matters with the debt collection agency, you or your attorney can negotiate a deal. First, figure out how much you can afford to pay and see if the collection agency will agree to that amount. The money could be a lump sum or monthly payments.

If possible, conduct negotiations at the end of the month. Collection agents often have deadlines and monthly goals they must meet. If they are desperate to reach one of those goals at the end of a month, they might be more willing to negotiate.If the collection agency accepts your terms, get it in writing before making payments. There should be written proof on how much will be paid and by what date that amount must be paid.

Rule 3: There Is A Statute Of Limitations

Creditors have a certain amount of time – six years in most states – to collect a debt before the statute of limitations runs out and they can no longer get a court judgment against you. You still owe the money and debt collectors may still attempt to collect it, but not with the help of a court judgment.

If you make a payment or agree to a repayment plan, you could restart the clock on the statute of limitations.

If you are not sure whether the statute of limitations applies in your case – the rules vary from state-to-state – simply ask the collection agency if your debt is “time-barred” meaning the statute of limitations has run out.

Rule 4: Check For Fake Debt Collectors

The only phone call worse than the one from the debt collection agency, is one from a fake collection agency.

Fake collection agencies use the same intimidation tactics, the same threats of arrest and the same claims they will tell family members about the debt if you don’t pay them. Often, the fake collection agencies are trying to collect on “phantom debts” that are too old to collect or were never proven to be valid.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) shut down two fake collection agencies in Miami that had bilked Latinos out of $2 million in 2014. The FTC warned consumers this type of fraud was spreading to communities across the country.

The fake collection agencies use the same avenues to find debtors that real agencies use: databases that sell personal information; mailing lists; information from credit applications; calls to relatives, friends or employers; and forwarding addresses from the post office.

To stop the scam before it costs you, the FTC suggests that you ask the caller from collection agency to provide their name, the company’s name, their street address and business phone number. Verify each of the answers before talking to the caller again.

Rule 5: No Big Early Payments Required, No Deadline To Act

Most collection agencies work on a commission basis, so it is not unusual for collectors to tell a debtor that he or she has to make a large down payment on the owed amount. They may say that a hefty initial sum is required in order to prevent collection fees from growing, or that it is necessary to begin the process of eliminating the debt from their records.

What they don’t want you to know is that there is no such requirement. They merely want to get as much money upfront as possible to inflate their commission.

Debt collectors also may tell you that there is a deadline for payment and threaten you with dire repercussions if the debt is not paid within the prescribed timeframe.

What they don’t want you to know is that there is no such thing as a deadline. It is a complete fabrication, one designed to get you to repay your debt as quickly as possible, because they know that the longer they have to wait to get paid, the less likely it is to ever happen.

Rule 6: Your Credit is Already Damaged

Collectors often exaggerate the consequences of delinquency and non-payment. Threats are illegal under the FDCPA, but suggestions that your credit score will suffer or that your possessions may be seized are simply scare tactics with nothing to back them up.

In fact, if your debt already is in collection, your credit score already has been damaged and the potential loss of your possessions is pure fiction. What they don’t want you to know is that all they can really do is ask, cajole, and demand that you pay. The rest is bluster.

Rule 7: Don’t Give Up Personal Information

Sometimes, debt collectors will ask you for personal information – your bank account number, Social Security number, where you work, references from friends and colleagues. Why? To put together a “financial statement” they need to work out any repayment plan.

They don’t want you to know that they are merely fishing for information that will help them find you if you move, sue you if you don’t repay, or get into your bank records. There is no financial statement, and you should never give out proprietary information to anyone – ever.

Rule 8: Collectors Can’t Cross State Lines

Debt collectors also don’t want you to know that they cannot pursue you across state borders to enforce a judgment levied against you by a creditor who sued you for non-payment and won. Transferring the judgment to another state is time-consuming and expensive and not likely to occur very often.

Rule 9: There Are Limits to Garnishment

Debt collectors don’t want you to know that there are limits on the amounts they can legally garnish from portions of your income, like salary, social security or pensions. For example, the maximum amount that can be taken from a paycheck is the lesser of 25% of your disposable earnings or the amount by which your wages exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage.

You can also file for complete exemption from wage garnishment, if you can verify that it will cause you or your family financial hardship to have any monies withheld.

Rule 10: There Are Options for Student Loan Debt

Debt collectors don’t want you to know that if you have student loan debt, while it still must be paid, you have the right, under the 1992 Higher Education Act, to set up a short-term payment schedule with the collection agency, requiring only “reasonable and affordable payments” – sometimes as little as $10 per month.

Successful completion of the student loan rehabilitation program (making nine out of 10 payments on time) takes the debt out of the collector’s portfolio and sends it back to the Department of Education. The collection agency loses its various commissions and bounties, and your loan is now being held under more favorable conditions.

Remember, high-pressure tactics by bill collectors are used solely to scare or bully you into paying them. While it is still your responsibility to square all your valid and legitimate debts, you don’t have to endure illegal, harassing or irritating activities.

Arming yourself with the right knowledge can help free you from the frustration – and empower you.

Author

Staff Writer

Bill Fay is a journalism veteran with a nearly four-decade career in reporting and writing for daily newspapers, magazines and public officials. His focus at Debt.org is on frugal living, veterans' finances, retirement and tax advice. Bill can be reached at bfay@debt.org.

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